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#1
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Kind of in the same ball park as "you people," don't ya think?
Boon |
#2
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![]() Vinylanach said: Kind of in the same ball park as "you people," don't ya think? Y'all need to git y'selves a real job, by cracky! |
#3
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In article
, Vinylanach wrote: Kind of in the same ball park as "you people," don't ya think? McCain's strategy is to belittle Obama: naive, wet behind the ears, etc. I wonder how that will work out for him. http://www.fritzliess.com/assets_c/2...at_one_01.html Stephen |
#4
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In article ,
MiNe 109 wrote: In article , Vinylanach wrote: Kind of in the same ball park as "you people," don't ya think? McCain's strategy is to belittle Obama: naive, wet behind the ears, etc. I wonder how that will work out for him. I'm REALLY HOPING that they continue the "hinting that Obama is a terrorist sympathizer and is dangerous" line of attack. Anyone who would swallow that crap is already voting for McCain, and it turns off undecided and normal people, IMO. It truly makes them look desperate. Did you hear that Cindy McCain called the Obama campaign the "nastiest ever"? lol |
#5
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![]() Jenn said: Did you hear that Cindy McCain called the Obama campaign the "nastiest ever"? lol What are you laughing at? You're probably in favor [gasp!] sex ed for children. |
#6
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On Oct 8, 11:31*am, Jenn wrote:
I'm REALLY HOPING that they continue the "hinting that Obama is a terrorist sympathizer and is dangerous" line of attack. *Anyone who would swallow that crap is already voting for McCain, and it turns off undecided and normal people, IMO. *It truly makes them look desperate. OTOH, I heard a guy on Sunday say that Omaba was a Muslim, so some of that does seem to stick. Aren't there still something like 25% who think that Iraq was involved in 9/11? |
#7
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![]() "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote in message ... On Oct 8, 11:31 am, Jenn wrote: I'm REALLY HOPING that they continue the "hinting that Obama is a terrorist sympathizer and is dangerous" line of attack. Anyone who would swallow that crap is already voting for McCain, and it turns off undecided and normal people, IMO. It truly makes them look desperate. OTOH, I heard a guy on Sunday say that Omaba was a Muslim, so some of that does seem to stick. Aren't there still something like 25% who think that Iraq was involved in 9/11? ********************************************8 It is the 25-30% of totally ignorant Americans that are slowly destroying this country through their voting choices. Was it Franklin or Jeffereson who pointed out that if Democracy were to fail, it would be because people did not educate themselves? |
#8
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In article ,
Jenn wrote: In article , MiNe 109 wrote: In article , Vinylanach wrote: Kind of in the same ball park as "you people," don't ya think? McCain's strategy is to belittle Obama: naive, wet behind the ears, etc. I wonder how that will work out for him. I'm REALLY HOPING that they continue the "hinting that Obama is a terrorist sympathizer and is dangerous" line of attack. Anyone who would swallow that crap is already voting for McCain, and it turns off undecided and normal people, IMO. It truly makes them look desperate. Did you hear that Cindy McCain called the Obama campaign the "nastiest ever"? lol My laughter is currently for Jerome "Swiftboat" Corsi's misadventures in Kenya. Stephen |
#9
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On 8 Oct, 10:00, Vinylanach wrote:
Kind of in the same ball park as "you people," don't ya think? "that one". I like it! How come our "that one" hasn't posted for a week? Is locked in his bedroom crying over his lost 401k? Did he have his meager savings parked in Wachiovia, AIG and Constellation Energy? Is he online, right now, trying to dump his sound cards on Ebay at 10 cents on the dollar? |
#10
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On 8 Oct, 12:31, Jenn wrote:
In article , *MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Vinylanach wrote: Kind of in the same ball park as "you people," don't ya think? McCain's strategy is to belittle Obama: naive, wet behind the ears, etc.. I wonder how that will work out for him. I'm REALLY HOPING that they continue the "hinting that Obama is a terrorist sympathizer and is dangerous" line of attack. *Anyone who would swallow that crap is already voting for McCain, and it turns off undecided and normal people, IMO. *It truly makes them look desperate. Its stupid tactics, people don't care about that when the dow is tanking more than an average of 300 points per day, for a week |
#11
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On 8 Oct, 15:53, "Harry Lavo" wrote:
It is the 25-30% of totally ignorant Americans that are slowly destroying this country through their voting choices. *Was it Franklin or Jeffereson who pointed out that if Democracy were to fail, it would be because people did not educate themselves? true, voters should educate themselves about the Dem's contributions to our economioc mess. (as well as the rep's contributions) |
#12
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Clyde Slick wrote:
Kind of in the same ball park as "you people," don't ya think? "that one". I like it! How come our "that one" hasn't posted for a week? Is locked in his bedroom crying over his lost 401k? Did he have his meager savings parked in Wachiovia, AIG and Constellation Energy? Is he online, right now, trying to dump his sound cards on Ebay at 10 cents on the dollar? Arnold Krooger? Probably too busy playing with these : http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.d...m=260140367719 -- S i g n a l @ l i n e o n e . n e t |
#13
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![]() Signal said: Is he online, right now, trying to dump his sound cards on Ebay at 10 cents on the dollar? Arnold Krooger? Probably too busy playing with these : http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.d...m=260140367719 If Turdborg were shopping on ebay, I'm sure he'd want to spring for some of these: http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...m=400001474301 |
#14
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In article
, Clyde Slick wrote: On 8 Oct, 15:53, "Harry Lavo" wrote: It is the 25-30% of totally ignorant Americans that are slowly destroying this country through their voting choices. *Was it Franklin or Jeffereson who pointed out that if Democracy were to fail, it would be because people did not educate themselves? true, voters should educate themselves about the Dem's contributions to our economioc mess. (as well as the rep's contributions) The Democratic responsibility consists of agreeing to Republican proposals. Stephen |
#15
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On 9 Oct, 06:38, MiNe 109 wrote:
In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 8 Oct, 15:53, "Harry Lavo" wrote: It is the 25-30% of totally ignorant Americans that are slowly destroying this country through their voting choices. *Was it Franklin or Jeffereson who pointed out that if Democracy were to fail, it would be because people did not educate themselves? true, voters should educate themselves about the Dem's contributions to our economioc mess. (as well as the rep's contributions) The Democratic responsibility consists of agreeing to Republican proposals. boy are you blind, the whole sub prime binge was a democratic push that some reps like Bush, went along with, others didn't. reps tried to reign it in. in 2004-5 the regulators testified before congress about the isks, thay were lambasted by dems like Waters, who said all was well with Freddie and Fannie. Check the C Span archives. |
#16
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In article
, Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 06:38, MiNe 109 wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 8 Oct, 15:53, "Harry Lavo" wrote: It is the 25-30% of totally ignorant Americans that are slowly destroying this country through their voting choices. *Was it Franklin or Jeffereson who pointed out that if Democracy were to fail, it would be because people did not educate themselves? true, voters should educate themselves about the Dem's contributions to our economioc mess. (as well as the rep's contributions) The Democratic responsibility consists of agreeing to Republican proposals. boy are you blind, the whole sub prime binge was a democratic push that some reps like Bush, went along with, others didn't. reps tried to reign it in. in 2004-5 the regulators testified before congress about the isks, thay were lambasted by dems like Waters, who said all was well with Freddie and Fannie. Check the C Span archives. Check out Phil Gramm's deregulation back in 2000 and Greenspan's cheerleading that markets were sufficient to regulate derivatives. Stephen |
#17
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On Oct 9, 12:34*pm, ScottW wrote:
You may now return to your usual delusional ignorant rants. Welcome back, 2pid. I hope the detox program was successful this time. |
#18
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On Oct 9, 2:28*pm, ScottW wrote:
On Oct 9, 10:56*am, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On Oct 9, 12:34*pm, ScottW wrote: You may now return to your usual delusional ignorant rants. Welcome back, 2pid. I hope the detox program was successful this time. *Right on cue. So has Palin "fired you up", 2pid? |
#19
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On 9 Oct, 10:34, MiNe 109 wrote:
In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 06:38, MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 8 Oct, 15:53, "Harry Lavo" wrote: It is the 25-30% of totally ignorant Americans that are slowly destroying this country through their voting choices. *Was it Franklin or Jeffereson who pointed out that if Democracy were to fail, it would be because people did not educate themselves? true, voters should educate themselves about the Dem's contributions to our economioc mess. (as well as the rep's contributions) The Democratic responsibility consists of agreeing to Republican proposals. boy are you blind, the whole sub prime binge was a democratic push that some reps like Bush, went along with, others didn't. reps tried to reign it in. in 2004-5 the regulators testified before congress about the isks, thay were lambasted by dems like Waters, who said all was well with Freddie and Fannie. Check the C Span archives. Check out Phil Gramm's deregulation back in 2000 and Greenspan's cheerleading that markets were sufficient to regulate derivatives. Stephen- I recognize both rep and dem mistakes you are blinded to the ones on the dem side. you can't fix the problem if you don't recognize waht it is and what caused it, in totality |
#20
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On 9 Oct, 13:34, ScottW wrote:
On Oct 9, 7:34*am, MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 06:38, MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 8 Oct, 15:53, "Harry Lavo" wrote: It is the 25-30% of totally ignorant Americans that are slowly destroying this country through their voting choices. *Was it Franklin or Jeffereson who pointed out that if Democracy were to fail, it would be because people did not educate themselves? true, voters should educate themselves about the Dem's contributions to our economioc mess. (as well as the rep's contributions) The Democratic responsibility consists of agreeing to Republican proposals. boy are you blind, the whole sub prime binge was a democratic push that some reps like Bush, went along with, others didn't. reps tried to reign it in. in 2004-5 the regulators testified before congress about the isks, thay were lambasted by dems like Waters, who said all was well with Freddie and Fannie. Check the C Span archives. Check out Phil Gramm's deregulation back in 2000 and Greenspan's cheerleading that markets were sufficient to regulate derivatives. *Good point. *"The bills were introduced in the U.S. Senate by Phil Gramm (R-Texas) and in the U.S. House of Representatives by Jim Leach (R-Iowa). The bills passed the Senate on a 54-44 vote along party lines (53 Republicans and one Democrat in favor; 44 Democrats opposed).[1] After passing both the Senate and House the bill was moved to a conference committee to work out the differences between the Senate and House versions. Democrats agreed to support the bill after Republicans agreed to strengthen provisions of the Community Reinvestment Act and address certain privacy concerns.[2] On November 4, the final bill resolving the differences was passed by the Senate 90-8 [3] and by the House 362-57.[4] This 'veto proof legislation' was signed into law by President Bill Clinton on November 12, 1999.[5] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gramm-Leach-Bliley_Act In 1999 the Congress enacted and President Clinton signed into law the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, also known as the "Financial Services Modernization Act," which repealed the part of the Glass-Steagall Act prohibiting a bank from offering a full range of investment, commercial banking, and insurance services. The bill was killed in 1998 because Senator Phil Gramm wanted the bill to expand the number of banks which no longer would be covered by the CRA. He also demanded full disclosure of any financial deals which community groups (LIKE ACORN) *had with banks, accusing such groups of "extortion." In 1999 Senators Christopher Dodd and Charles E. Schumer broke another deadlock by forcing a compromise between Gramm and the Clinton administration which wanted to prevent banks from expanding into insurance or securities unless they were compliant with the CRA. In the final compromise, the CRA would cover bank expansions into new lines of business, community groups would have to disclose certain kinds of financial deals with banks, and smaller banks would be reviewed less frequently for CRA compliance.[28][29][30] On signing the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, President Clinton said that it, "establishes the principles that, as we expand the powers of banks, we will expand the reach of the [Community Reinvestment] Act".[31] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communi...#Legislative_c... The root of the problem was opening the door to subprime mortgages which CRA certainly encouraged if not directly enabled. Gramm-Leach-Bliley expanded the impact of the problem by consolidating banking services under one roof. The bubble of housing prices was fueled by a subprime frenzy which was at least encouraged by the CRA and other like minded legislation to increase home ownership among the poor. *These efforts forced banks to lend money to non credit worthy customers. *Other banks not required to comply with CRA could not pass up *the massive short term profits subprime lending was offering as the cost of money dipped to near zero ( the Fed overreacted to the recession of 2000-2002) and retain share value when other banks were showing such huge profits and drawing away investors/shareholders. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for example had no business in buying subprime loans and contributing to the eventual collapse of morgage backed securities. But they started on that path with strong encouragement from their democratic backers in the house and senate who had embarked on a socialist program of home ownership http://www.nhi.org/online/issues/80/fanny.html "For the years 1993 and 1994, the GSE Act established a set of escalating performance goals that measured, as a percentage of the GSEs' total business, the availability of housing financing for low- and moderate-income families; for very-low-income families; and for families living in central cities, rural areas, and other underserved areas. The Act directed HUD to examine these goals and the assumptions upon which they are based and then develop new goals for 1995, 1996, and beyond. The proposed regulations set minimum acceptable activity in numerical terms for housing goals in each of the three categories. Goals are set in each category for both single family homeownership and multi-family mortgages. In each case, the proposed rule increases from the previous two years the level of affordable housing business each GSE must set. The proposed regulations differ from the interim regulations in three significant ways: the definition of an underserved area; a requirement that the GSEs inform HUD of fair housing violations by lenders; and an expanded interpretation of when the GSEs are required to take new business activity for review and approval to the Secretary of HUD. " Additionally the securitization of mortgages made the acceptance of credit risk a game of musical chairs, who was left holding the securities when the prices started to fall. This is of course aggravated in the extreme by the simple fact that mortgage backed securities aren't valued by how much money they will make via mortgage interest minus defaults, but by how much they can be sold on the security market at any point in time. This is the "mark to market" issue often discussed of late. When investors lost faith that credit rating agencies had any abilty to estimate the number of loans in a package that will default nor the debt to equity (value of the homes) ratio, the market values of the securities plunged far below what they will ultimately earn from mortgage interest income. You may now return to your usual delusional ignorant rants. ScottW- "at least" his are short, inlike sHHH'S |
#21
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On 9 Oct, 15:48, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!"
wrote: On Oct 9, 2:28*pm, ScottW wrote: On Oct 9, 10:56*am, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On Oct 9, 12:34*pm, ScottW wrote: You may now return to your usual delusional ignorant rants. Welcome back, 2pid. I hope the detox program was successful this time.. *Right on cue. So has Palin "fired you up", 2pid? Sexually? |
#22
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On Oct 9, 3:01*pm, Clyde Slick wrote:
On 9 Oct, 15:48, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On Oct 9, 2:28*pm, ScottW wrote: On Oct 9, 10:56*am, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On Oct 9, 12:34*pm, ScottW wrote: You may now return to your usual delusional ignorant rants. Welcome back, 2pid. I hope the detox program was successful this time. *Right on cue. So has Palin "fired you up", 2pid? Sexually? Palin is no dog. LOL! |
#23
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On Oct 9, 2:59*pm, Clyde Slick wrote:
On 9 Oct, 10:34, MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 06:38, MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 8 Oct, 15:53, "Harry Lavo" wrote: It is the 25-30% of totally ignorant Americans that are slowly destroying this country through their voting choices. *Was it Franklin or Jeffereson who pointed out that if Democracy were to fail, it would be because people did not educate themselves? true, voters should educate themselves about the Dem's contributions to our economioc mess. (as well as the rep's contributions) The Democratic responsibility consists of agreeing to Republican proposals. boy are you blind, the whole sub prime binge was a democratic push that some reps like Bush, went along with, others didn't. reps tried to reign it in. in 2004-5 the regulators testified before congress about the isks, thay were lambasted by dems like Waters, who said all was well with Freddie and Fannie. Check the C Span archives. Check out Phil Gramm's deregulation back in 2000 and Greenspan's cheerleading that markets were sufficient to regulate derivatives. I recognize both rep and dem mistakes you are blinded to the ones on the dem side. you can't fix the problem if you don't recognize waht it is and what caused it, in totality The core, basic, first problem was deregulation. Everything that followed was a symptom of that fundamental mistake. |
#24
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On Oct 9, 3:00*pm, Clyde Slick wrote:
On 9 Oct, 13:34, ScottW wrote: On Oct 9, 7:34*am, MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 06:38, MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 8 Oct, 15:53, "Harry Lavo" wrote: It is the 25-30% of totally ignorant Americans that are slowly destroying this country through their voting choices. *Was it Franklin or Jeffereson who pointed out that if Democracy were to fail, it would be because people did not educate themselves? true, voters should educate themselves about the Dem's contributions to our economioc mess. (as well as the rep's contributions) The Democratic responsibility consists of agreeing to Republican proposals. boy are you blind, the whole sub prime binge was a democratic push that some reps like Bush, went along with, others didn't. reps tried to reign it in. in 2004-5 the regulators testified before congress about the isks, thay were lambasted by dems like Waters, who said all was well with Freddie and Fannie. Check the C Span archives. Check out Phil Gramm's deregulation back in 2000 and Greenspan's cheerleading that markets were sufficient to regulate derivatives. *Good point. *"The bills were introduced in the U.S. Senate by Phil Gramm (R-Texas) and in the U.S. House of Representatives by Jim Leach (R-Iowa). The bills passed the Senate on a 54-44 vote along party lines (53 Republicans and one Democrat in favor; 44 Democrats opposed).[1] After passing both the Senate and House the bill was moved to a conference committee to work out the differences between the Senate and House versions. Democrats agreed to support the bill after Republicans agreed to strengthen provisions of the Community Reinvestment Act and address certain privacy concerns.[2] On November 4, the final bill resolving the differences was passed by the Senate 90-8 [3] and by the House 362-57.[4] This 'veto proof legislation' was signed into law by President Bill Clinton on November 12, 1999.[5] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gramm-Leach-Bliley_Act In 1999 the Congress enacted and President Clinton signed into law the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, also known as the "Financial Services Modernization Act," which repealed the part of the Glass-Steagall Act prohibiting a bank from offering a full range of investment, commercial banking, and insurance services. The bill was killed in 1998 because Senator Phil Gramm wanted the bill to expand the number of banks which no longer would be covered by the CRA. He also demanded full disclosure of any financial deals which community groups (LIKE ACORN) *had with banks, accusing such groups of "extortion." In 1999 Senators Christopher Dodd and Charles E. Schumer broke another deadlock by forcing a compromise between Gramm and the Clinton administration which wanted to prevent banks from expanding into insurance or securities unless they were compliant with the CRA. In the final compromise, the CRA would cover bank expansions into new lines of business, community groups would have to disclose certain kinds of financial deals with banks, and smaller banks would be reviewed less frequently for CRA compliance.[28][29][30] On signing the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, President Clinton said that it, "establishes the principles that, as we expand the powers of banks, we will expand the reach of the [Community Reinvestment] Act".[31] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communi...#Legislative_c... The root of the problem was opening the door to subprime mortgages which CRA certainly encouraged if not directly enabled. Gramm-Leach-Bliley expanded the impact of the problem by consolidating banking services under one roof. The bubble of housing prices was fueled by a subprime frenzy which was at least encouraged by the CRA and other like minded legislation to increase home ownership among the poor. *These efforts forced banks to lend money to non credit worthy customers. *Other banks not required to comply with CRA could not pass up *the massive short term profits subprime lending was offering as the cost of money dipped to near zero ( the Fed overreacted to the recession of 2000-2002) and retain share value when other banks were showing such huge profits and drawing away investors/shareholders. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for example had no business in buying subprime loans and contributing to the eventual collapse of morgage backed securities. But they started on that path with strong encouragement from their democratic backers in the house and senate who had embarked on a socialist program of home ownership http://www.nhi.org/online/issues/80/fanny.html "For the years 1993 and 1994, the GSE Act established a set of escalating performance goals that measured, as a percentage of the GSEs' total business, the availability of housing financing for low- and moderate-income families; for very-low-income families; and for families living in central cities, rural areas, and other underserved areas. The Act directed HUD to examine these goals and the assumptions upon which they are based and then develop new goals for 1995, 1996, and beyond. The proposed regulations set minimum acceptable activity in numerical terms for housing goals in each of the three categories. Goals are set in each category for both single family homeownership and multi-family mortgages. In each case, the proposed rule increases from the previous two years the level of affordable housing business each GSE must set. The proposed regulations differ from the interim regulations in three significant ways: the definition of an underserved area; a requirement that the GSEs inform HUD of fair housing violations by lenders; and an expanded interpretation of when the GSEs are required to take new business activity for review and approval to the Secretary of HUD. " Additionally the securitization of mortgages made the acceptance of credit risk a game of musical chairs, who was left holding the securities when the prices started to fall. This is of course aggravated in the extreme by the simple fact that mortgage backed securities aren't valued by how much money they will make via mortgage interest minus defaults, but by how much they can be sold on the security market at any point in time. This is the "mark to market" issue often discussed of late. When investors lost faith that credit rating agencies had any abilty to estimate the number of loans in a package that will default nor the debt to equity (value of the homes) ratio, the market values of the securities plunged far below what they will ultimately earn from mortgage interest income. You may now return to your usual delusional ignorant rants. ScottW- "at least" his are short, inlike sHHH'S ....said Clyde responding to 2pid's 5,000 word delusional and ignorant rant. LOL! |
#25
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On 9 Oct, 16:23, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!"
wrote: On Oct 9, 2:59*pm, Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 10:34, MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 06:38, MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 8 Oct, 15:53, "Harry Lavo" wrote: It is the 25-30% of totally ignorant Americans that are slowly destroying this country through their voting choices. *Was it Franklin or Jeffereson who pointed out that if Democracy were to fail, it would be because people did not educate themselves? true, voters should educate themselves about the Dem's contributions to our economioc mess. (as well as the rep's contributions) The Democratic responsibility consists of agreeing to Republican proposals. boy are you blind, the whole sub prime binge was a democratic push that some reps like Bush, went along with, others didn't. reps tried to reign it in. in 2004-5 the regulators testified before congress about the isks, thay were lambasted by dems like Waters, who said all was well with Freddie and Fannie. Check the C Span archives. Check out Phil Gramm's deregulation back in 2000 and Greenspan's cheerleading that markets were sufficient to regulate derivatives. I recognize both rep and dem mistakes you are blinded to the ones on the dem side. you can't fix the problem if you don't recognize waht it is and what caused it, in totality The core, basic, first problem was deregulation. Everything that followed was a symptom of that fundamental mistake.- the core mistake was sub prime loans 'deregulation' is a vaguery there are all kiinds of regs, some good, some bad. regs cover lots of areas, some are consumer protection based, some are protectionsit, some are anticompetitive and some are antifraud. It bad to get rid of the anti fraud and consumer based ones, and generally good to lessen the protectionist and anticompetitive ones. and i say generally, cause all circumsatnces are different. |
#26
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On 9 Oct, 16:24, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!"
wrote: On Oct 9, 3:00*pm, Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 13:34, ScottW wrote: On Oct 9, 7:34*am, MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 06:38, MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 8 Oct, 15:53, "Harry Lavo" wrote: It is the 25-30% of totally ignorant Americans that are slowly destroying this country through their voting choices. *Was it Franklin or Jeffereson who pointed out that if Democracy were to fail, it would be because people did not educate themselves? true, voters should educate themselves about the Dem's contributions to our economioc mess. (as well as the rep's contributions) The Democratic responsibility consists of agreeing to Republican proposals. boy are you blind, the whole sub prime binge was a democratic push that some reps like Bush, went along with, others didn't. reps tried to reign it in. in 2004-5 the regulators testified before congress about the isks, thay were lambasted by dems like Waters, who said all was well with Freddie and Fannie. Check the C Span archives. Check out Phil Gramm's deregulation back in 2000 and Greenspan's cheerleading that markets were sufficient to regulate derivatives. *Good point. *"The bills were introduced in the U.S. Senate by Phil Gramm (R-Texas) and in the U.S. House of Representatives by Jim Leach (R-Iowa). The bills passed the Senate on a 54-44 vote along party lines (53 Republicans and one Democrat in favor; 44 Democrats opposed).[1] After passing both the Senate and House the bill was moved to a conference committee to work out the differences between the Senate and House versions. Democrats agreed to support the bill after Republicans agreed to strengthen provisions of the Community Reinvestment Act and address certain privacy concerns.[2] On November 4, the final bill resolving the differences was passed by the Senate 90-8 [3] and by the House 362-57.[4] This 'veto proof legislation' was signed into law by President Bill Clinton on November 12, 1999.[5] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gramm-Leach-Bliley_Act In 1999 the Congress enacted and President Clinton signed into law the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, also known as the "Financial Services Modernization Act," which repealed the part of the Glass-Steagall Act prohibiting a bank from offering a full range of investment, commercial banking, and insurance services. The bill was killed in 1998 because Senator Phil Gramm wanted the bill to expand the number of banks which no longer would be covered by the CRA. He also demanded full disclosure of any financial deals which community groups (LIKE ACORN) *had with banks, accusing such groups of "extortion." In 1999 Senators Christopher Dodd and Charles E. Schumer broke another deadlock by forcing a compromise between Gramm and the Clinton administration which wanted to prevent banks from expanding into insurance or securities unless they were compliant with the CRA. In the final compromise, the CRA would cover bank expansions into new lines of business, community groups would have to disclose certain kinds of financial deals with banks, and smaller banks would be reviewed less frequently for CRA compliance.[28][29][30] On signing the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, President Clinton said that it, "establishes the principles that, as we expand the powers of banks, we will expand the reach of the [Community Reinvestment] Act".[31] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communi...#Legislative_c.... The root of the problem was opening the door to subprime mortgages which CRA certainly encouraged if not directly enabled. Gramm-Leach-Bliley expanded the impact of the problem by consolidating banking services under one roof. The bubble of housing prices was fueled by a subprime frenzy which was at least encouraged by the CRA and other like minded legislation to increase home ownership among the poor. *These efforts forced banks to lend money to non credit worthy customers. *Other banks not required to comply with CRA could not pass up *the massive short term profits subprime lending was offering as the cost of money dipped to near zero ( the Fed overreacted to the recession of 2000-2002) and retain share value when other banks were showing such huge profits and drawing away investors/shareholders. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for example had no business in buying subprime loans and contributing to the eventual collapse of morgage backed securities. But they started on that path with strong encouragement from their democratic backers in the house and senate who had embarked on a socialist program of home ownership http://www.nhi.org/online/issues/80/fanny.html "For the years 1993 and 1994, the GSE Act established a set of escalating performance goals that measured, as a percentage of the GSEs' total business, the availability of housing financing for low- and moderate-income families; for very-low-income families; and for families living in central cities, rural areas, and other underserved areas. The Act directed HUD to examine these goals and the assumptions upon which they are based and then develop new goals for 1995, 1996, and beyond. The proposed regulations set minimum acceptable activity in numerical terms for housing goals in each of the three categories. Goals are set in each category for both single family homeownership and multi-family mortgages. In each case, the proposed rule increases from the previous two years the level of affordable housing business each GSE must set. The proposed regulations differ from the interim regulations in three significant ways: the definition of an underserved area; a requirement that the GSEs inform HUD of fair housing violations by lenders; and an expanded interpretation of when the GSEs are required to take new business activity for review and approval to the Secretary of HUD. " Additionally the securitization of mortgages made the acceptance of credit risk a game of musical chairs, who was left holding the securities when the prices started to fall. This is of course aggravated in the extreme by the simple fact that mortgage backed securities aren't valued by how much money they will make via mortgage interest minus defaults, but by how much they can be sold on the security market at any point in time. This is the "mark to market" issue often discussed of late. When investors lost faith that credit rating agencies had any abilty to estimate the number of loans in a package that will default nor the debt to equity (value of the homes) ratio, the market values of the securities plunged far below what they will ultimately earn from mortgage interest income. You may now return to your usual delusional ignorant rants. ScottW- "at least" his are short, inlike sHHH'S ...said Clyde responding to 2pid's 5,000 word delusional and ignorant rant. LOL!- 'at least" you are at your least.' For now, "at least". |
#27
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![]() Clyde Slick said: 'deregulation' is a vaguery I won't ask if you're drunk or sober anymore. The answer has become obvious. |
#28
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On Oct 9, 5:29*pm, Clyde Slick wrote:
On 9 Oct, 16:23, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On Oct 9, 2:59*pm, Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 10:34, MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 06:38, MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 8 Oct, 15:53, "Harry Lavo" wrote: It is the 25-30% of totally ignorant Americans that are slowly destroying this country through their voting choices. *Was it Franklin or Jeffereson who pointed out that if Democracy were to fail, it would be because people did not educate themselves? true, voters should educate themselves about the Dem's contributions to our economioc mess. (as well as the rep's contributions) The Democratic responsibility consists of agreeing to Republican proposals. boy are you blind, the whole sub prime binge was a democratic push that some reps like Bush, went along with, others didn't. reps tried to reign it in. in 2004-5 the regulators testified before congress about the isks, thay were lambasted by dems like Waters, who said all was well with Freddie and Fannie. Check the C Span archives. Check out Phil Gramm's deregulation back in 2000 and Greenspan's cheerleading that markets were sufficient to regulate derivatives. I recognize both rep and dem mistakes you are blinded to the ones on the dem side. you can't fix the problem if you don't recognize waht it is and what caused it, in totality The core, basic, first problem was deregulation. Everything that followed was a symptom of that fundamental mistake.- the core mistake was sub prime loans 'deregulation' is a vaguery there are all kiinds of regs, some good, some bad. regs cover lots of areas, some are consumer protection based, some are protectionsit, some are anticompetitive and some are antifraud. It bad to get rid of the anti fraud and consumer based ones, and generally good to lessen the protectionist and anticompetitive ones. and i say generally, cause all circumsatnces are different. If you look at what 2pid posted in trying to blame the Dems, did you note this? ************************************** Gramm-Leach-Bliley expanded the impact of the problem by consolidating banking services under one roof. The bubble of housing prices was fueled by a subprime frenzy which was at least encouraged by the CRA and other like minded legislation to increase home ownership among the poor. These efforts forced banks to lend money to non credit worthy customers. Other banks not required to comply with CRA could not pass up the massive short term profits subprime lending was offering as the cost of money dipped to near zero ( the Fed overreacted to the recession of 2000-2002) and retain share value when other banks were showing such huge profits and drawing away investors/shareholders. ************************************** "At least encouraged". "Could not pass up the massive short-term profits". Removing the regulations concerning banking were, and are, a bad deal. The market is all about greed. A deregulated market can only work if things like short-term profit are not the only driving force. The CEOs lack integrity as a whole. Look up Tom Petters as a very recent example. The dream of conservatives to return to the Wild West is coming to an end. People are seeing through it now. |
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On Oct 9, 5:31*pm, Clyde Slick wrote:
On 9 Oct, 16:24, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" ...said Clyde responding to 2pid's 5,000 word delusional and ignorant rant. LOL!- 'at least" you are at your least.' For now, "at least". Not all points can be fleshed out in the 5-10 second sound bites conservatives are accustomed to. |
#30
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In article
, ScottW wrote: You may now return to your usual delusional ignorant rants. Good research, if a bit surfacey. Did you happen to notice the relative default rates of CRA vs other mortgages? Hint: it doesn't support your argument. Stephen |
#31
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In article
, Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 10:34, MiNe 109 wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 06:38, MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 8 Oct, 15:53, "Harry Lavo" wrote: It is the 25-30% of totally ignorant Americans that are slowly destroying this country through their voting choices. *Was it Franklin or Jeffereson who pointed out that if Democracy were to fail, it would be because people did not educate themselves? true, voters should educate themselves about the Dem's contributions to our economioc mess. (as well as the rep's contributions) The Democratic responsibility consists of agreeing to Republican proposals. boy are you blind, the whole sub prime binge was a democratic push that some reps like Bush, went along with, others didn't. reps tried to reign it in. in 2004-5 the regulators testified before congress about the isks, thay were lambasted by dems like Waters, who said all was well with Freddie and Fannie. Check the C Span archives. Check out Phil Gramm's deregulation back in 2000 and Greenspan's cheerleading that markets were sufficient to regulate derivatives. Stephen- I recognize both rep and dem mistakes you are blinded to the ones on the dem side. you can't fix the problem if you don't recognize waht it is and what caused it, in totality And there's nothing one-sided about your assessment, right? Recapitalization and reregulation should do the trick. Stephen |
#32
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In article
, Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 15:48, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On Oct 9, 2:28*pm, ScottW wrote: On Oct 9, 10:56*am, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On Oct 9, 12:34*pm, ScottW wrote: You may now return to your usual delusional ignorant rants. Welcome back, 2pid. I hope the detox program was successful this time. *Right on cue. So has Palin "fired you up", 2pid? Sexually? A la Rick Lowry. Stephen |
#33
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In article
, Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 16:23, "Shhhh! I'm Listening to Reason!" wrote: On Oct 9, 2:59*pm, Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 10:34, MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 06:38, MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 8 Oct, 15:53, "Harry Lavo" wrote: It is the 25-30% of totally ignorant Americans that are slowly destroying this country through their voting choices. *Was it Franklin or Jeffereson who pointed out that if Democracy were to fail, it would be because people did not educate themselves? true, voters should educate themselves about the Dem's contributions to our economioc mess. (as well as the rep's contributions) The Democratic responsibility consists of agreeing to Republican proposals. boy are you blind, the whole sub prime binge was a democratic push that some reps like Bush, went along with, others didn't. reps tried to reign it in. in 2004-5 the regulators testified before congress about the isks, thay were lambasted by dems like Waters, who said all was well with Freddie and Fannie. Check the C Span archives. Check out Phil Gramm's deregulation back in 2000 and Greenspan's cheerleading that markets were sufficient to regulate derivatives. I recognize both rep and dem mistakes you are blinded to the ones on the dem side. you can't fix the problem if you don't recognize waht it is and what caused it, in totality The core, basic, first problem was deregulation. Everything that followed was a symptom of that fundamental mistake.- the core mistake was sub prime loans 'deregulation' is a vaguery there are all kiinds of regs, some good, some bad. I'm sure we mean the ones that directly affect the subject under discussion. regs cover lots of areas, some are consumer protection based, some are protectionsit, some are anticompetitive and some are antifraud. It bad to get rid of the anti fraud and consumer based ones, and generally good to lessen the protectionist and anticompetitive ones. and i say generally, cause all circumsatnces are different. Specifically, the ones that caused this mess. Stephen |
#34
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In article
, ScottW wrote: Exactly what "deregulation" law allowed banks to originate loans to non credit worthy customers? The problem is deregulation that allowed banks/financial institutions to create financial instruments based on mortgages and insure them with derivatives. Stephen |
#35
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![]() MiNe 109 said: Exactly what "deregulation" law allowed banks to originate loans to non credit worthy customers? The problem is deregulation that allowed banks/financial institutions to create financial instruments based on mortgages and insure them with derivatives. If you keep talking like that, Scottie's head may explode. Are you prepared to shoulder that responsibility? |
#36
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In article ,
George M. Middius wrote: MiNe 109 said: Exactly what "deregulation" law allowed banks to originate loans to non credit worthy customers? The problem is deregulation that allowed banks/financial institutions to create financial instruments based on mortgages and insure them with derivatives. If you keep talking like that, Scottie's head may explode. Are you prepared to shoulder that responsibility? He's like an old cop a week away from retirement... Stephen |
#37
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On Oct 9, 7:34*am, MiNe 109 wrote:
In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 06:38, MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 8 Oct, 15:53, "Harry Lavo" wrote: It is the 25-30% of totally ignorant Americans that are slowly destroying this country through their voting choices. *Was it Franklin or Jeffereson who pointed out that if Democracy were to fail, it would be because people did not educate themselves? true, voters should educate themselves about the Dem's contributions to our economioc mess. (as well as the rep's contributions) The Democratic responsibility consists of agreeing to Republican proposals. boy are you blind, the whole sub prime binge was a democratic push that some reps like Bush, went along with, others didn't. reps tried to reign it in. in 2004-5 the regulators testified before congress about the isks, thay were lambasted by dems like Waters, who said all was well with Freddie and Fannie. Check the C Span archives. Check out Phil Gramm's deregulation back in 2000 and Greenspan's cheerleading that markets were sufficient to regulate derivatives. Stephen Whatever you do don't check factcheck.org and get a complete picture of the mess. You obviously don't want to know that there is blame enough to go around on both sides and trying to single out just one side or person is just plain nuts. |
#38
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![]() duh-Mikey blithered: You obviously don't want to know that there is blame enough to go around on both sides and trying to single out just one side or person is just plain nuts. Speaking of Gordian knots, how 'bout that Krooborg? Mr. **** has been bitching for years that he is hated and despised throughout Usenet because of me and others. That's "just plain nuts", right Mikey? |
#39
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![]() Yapper tries to rescue the Bug Eater from a morass of all-consuming dementia. duh-Mikey blithered: You obviously don't want to know that there is blame enough to go around on both sides and trying to single out just one side or person is just plain nuts. Speaking of Gordian knots, how 'bout that Krooborg? Mr. **** has been bitching for years that he is hated and despised throughout Usenet because of me and others. That's "just plain nuts", right Mikey? What's nuts is how you've become so emotionally dependent on Arny. Arnii would lecture you on Schopenhauer's list if you hadn't killed him. Why did you kill the Krooborg, Witless? |
#40
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In article
, avidlistener wrote: On Oct 9, 7:34*am, MiNe 109 wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 9 Oct, 06:38, MiNe 109 * wrote: In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 8 Oct, 15:53, "Harry Lavo" wrote: It is the 25-30% of totally ignorant Americans that are slowly destroying this country through their voting choices. *Was it Franklin or Jeffereson who pointed out that if Democracy were to fail, it would be because people did not educate themselves? true, voters should educate themselves about the Dem's contributions to our economioc mess. (as well as the rep's contributions) The Democratic responsibility consists of agreeing to Republican proposals. boy are you blind, the whole sub prime binge was a democratic push that some reps like Bush, went along with, others didn't. reps tried to reign it in. in 2004-5 the regulators testified before congress about the isks, thay were lambasted by dems like Waters, who said all was well with Freddie and Fannie. Check the C Span archives. Check out Phil Gramm's deregulation back in 2000 and Greenspan's cheerleading that markets were sufficient to regulate derivatives. Stephen Whatever you do don't check factcheck.org and get a complete picture of the mess. You obviously don't want to know that there is blame enough to go around on both sides and trying to single out just one side or person is just plain nuts. Thanks for the tip! Stephen |
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